Something for the weekend:
The doctor-patient relationship and patient resilience in chronic pain: A qualitative approach to patients’ perspectives (article)
Multi-morbidity: A patient perspective on navigating the health care system and everyday life (article)
Work was once the way to a better life. Not any more (magazine)
Animating the anatomical specimen (article)
Sage's new Critical Thinking course (online course)
The future of the university in a polarizing world (pdf)
Palgrave MacMillan weekend £15 eBook sale - use code PCW18E at checkout (link)
Want to be a futurist? First, become a historian (magazine)
AI, work and ‘outcome-thinking’ (blog) … [Read more...] about CPN Digest #13

Something for the weekend:
Digital diagnosis: How your smartphone or wearable device could forecast illness (magazine)
The Mindful Body: A Phenomenology of the Body With Multiple Sclerosis (article)
The Future of Healthcare: The Impact of Digitalization on Healthcare Services Performance (chapter)
Digital health – a new medical cosmology? The case of 23andMe online genetic testing platform (article)
The further future of healthcare (blog)
Relax. Do nothing. Become no one - the philosophy of Byung-Chul Han (magazine)
Early Career Researcher Advice Article of the Week: Five benefits of a writing ‘system’ by Chris Smith (blog)
Mobility and participation among ageing … [Read more...] about CPN Digest #12

Something for the weekend:
Building healthy this, and this (magazine, event)
Work was once the way to a better life. Not any more (magazine)
Waiting for better care: why Australia’s hospitals and health care is failing (blog)
Gender Bias, Medical Sexism, and Women’s Encounters with Modern Medicine (blog)
Three books on the brain (article)
The Power of the Researcher's Body, Emotions, and Identities in Ethnography (article)
Going a Long Way in a Wheelchair (blog)
Learning to Be Old: How Qualitative Research Contributes to Our Understanding of Ageism (article)
A call to include art in pre-med education (blog)
It’s dangerous to think virtual reality is an empathy … [Read more...] about CPN Digest #11

Something for the weekend:
“It’s Hard Work”: A Feminist Political Economy Approach to Reconceptualizing “Work” in the Cancer Context (article)
E-Learning 3.0 from Stephen Downes (presentation)
Transforming Science Education for the Anthropocene—Is It Possible? (article)
How an industry shifted from protecting patients to seeking profit (magazine)
Gamified life: From scoreboards to trackers, games have infiltrated work, serving as spies, overseers and agents of social control (magazine)
Teaching how to work in 21st century (p.5) (magazine)
Australia's toxic medical culture (book)
Rembis on Hanes and Brown and Hansen, 'The Routledge History of Disability' (book … [Read more...] about CPN Digest #10

Something for the weekend:
Unlearning Expertise Knowledge and Unsettling Expertise Positions (magazine)
Diagnosing the past (magazine)
The peculiar history of surgical gloves (blog)
Using photography to enhance GP trainees’ reflective practice and professional development (podcast)
What were the top tools for learning in 2018? (blog)
Four lessons for Australia from England's system of rating its aged care homes (magazine)
Health care is getting cheaper (unless you need a specialist, or a dentist) (magazine)
Far right, misogynist, humourless? Why Nietzsche is misunderstood (magazine)
Aging in twenthieth-century Britain (podcast)
Tensions Living Out Professional … [Read more...] about CPN Digest #9

Something for the weekend:
How to live better, according to Nietzsche (magazine)
The central problem of postmodernism, according to Terry Eagleton (magazine)
‘Everything I enjoy doing I just couldn’t do’: Biographical disruption for sport-related injury (article)
The (subtly fascistic) Ethics Of Transhumanism And The Cult Of Futurist Biotech (blog)
Aged care failures show how little we value older people – and those who care for them, plus this, and this (news)
Consolation philosophy: A truly African philosophy (magazine)
A Discursive Analysis Method to Investigate Decision-Making Processes in the Intensive Care Unit
I, holobiont. Are you and your microbes a … [Read more...] about CPN Digest #8

Something for the discerning physiotherapy reader:
In honour of Paul Virilio, one of my favourite philosophers, who died on 18th September 2018 (magazine)
Assembling the ‘Fitbit subject’ (article)
When patients’ invisible work becomes visible (article)
How the humanities can deliver for the fourth industrial revolution (blog)
Wandering as a Sociomaterial Practice (article)
A Systematized Review of Creative Research Methods (article)
Medical illustration (podcast)
The Central Role of Theory in Qualitative Research (article)
People with illness experiences seeking legitimate positions as health service developers and producers (article)
The 'other' (magazine) … [Read more...] about CPN Digest #7

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